1981's Magic, Murder and the Weather is repressed for the first time on colored vinyl and features unseen images and new notes from band members compiled and curated by Rory Sullivan-Burke.
2011's No Thyself, released following a 2009 reformation, is repressed for the first time on colored vinyl and features unseen images and new notes from band members compiled and curated by Rory Sullivan-Burke.
Enduringly credible, Magazine have always been the music connoisseur's choice; frequently name checked by some of the most gifted musicians of recent years
9 songs of crushed, mangled, melted analog synths and pounding bass drums, a journey across time in real time on the only vehicle we have to experience it.
First released in August 1987, Diesel and Dust is a concept album about the struggles of Indigenous Australians and environmental causes, issues important to the band.
The compilation consists of the group's first two extended plays, Minor Threat (originally released June 1981) and In My Eyes (originally released December 1981).
An archival release of recordings by the American hardcore punk band Minor Threat comprising previously unreleased demo versions of material which appears on the band's subsequent recordings.
Out of Step is the sole studio album by American hardcore punk band Minor Threat. It was released on 45 RPM vinyl in April 1983 through Dischord Records.
The debut studio album by the American punk rock band Minutemen, released in 1981. It's a short, high-energy album with 18 songs spanning just 15 minutes, showcasing the band's unique blend of punk, funk, and hardcore.
Vinyl LP repressing of this 1986 collection from the Punk legends. The compilation is officially titled Misfits, but is commonly referred to as Collection I and was made up as the first half of a pair with the later release of the compilation album Collec
"Die, Die My Darling" is a song by the American horror punk band Misfits. It was released in May 1984 on singer Glenn Danzig's label Plan 9 Records, seven months after the band's breakup. The song is titled after the 1965 horror film Fanatic, which had be